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LEFT WING LOONS Title: Government TV racists call DC 'hood "Chocolate City", homies offended NPR aired an eight-minute feature on D.C.s Anacostia neighborhood on Tuesday morning. The website version was titled D.C., Long Chocolate City, Becoming More Vanilla -- but even with the flavorful name, it left a bad taste in many locals mouths. On the air, reporter Alex Kellogg said, Theres major changes going on in Washington, D.C. This is a city that, in 1970, was about 71 percent black. And now it's about 53 percent black, as of 2009.
That's a city that will soon no longer be majority African-American, and a lot of the gains are in the white population that's moving in. In the online version, Kellogg wrote, For decades Washington, D.C., was known affectionately as Chocolate City to many black Americans, because it was predominantly African-American. But D.C. has quickly become one of the most expensive cities in America, and one of the only cities in the U.S. where property values continue to rise despite the economic downturn. Kellogg wrote that in recent years, even areas like Anacostia -- a community that was virtually all-black and more often than not poor -- have seen dramatic increases in property values. The median sales price of a home east of the river -- for years a no-go zone for whites and many blacks -- was just under $300,000 in 2009, two to three times what it was in the mid-'90s. After profiling one black resident who moved out, Kellogg spoke with David Garber, a newcomer among those who see themselves as trailblazers fighting to preserve the integrity of historic Anacostia. Weird News Photos Weird News Photos LOOK Weird News Photos But Garber and others didnt like the portrayal, as even WAMUs Anna John noted in her DCentric blog, where she headlined a post Morning Edition Chokes On Chocolate City. On his own blog And Now, Anacostia, Garber wrote that the NPR story was a dishonest portrayal of the changes that are happening in Anacostia. First, his evidence that black people are being forced out is based entirely on the story of one man who chose to buy a larger and more expensive house in PG County than one he was considering near Anacostia. Second, he attempts to prove that Anacostia is becoming more vanilla by talking about one white person, me -- and I dont even live there anymore. Garber also complained that Kellogg chose to sensationalize my move out of Anacostia by linking it to a break-in at his home, which Garber says was unrelated to his move. Garber says Kellogg chose to repeat the canned story of Anacostia -- which We Love D.C. bluntly calls a quick and dirty race narrative. Garber continues, White people are moving into Anacostia. So are black people. So are Asian people, Middle Eastern people, gay people, straight people, and every other mix. And good for them for believing in a neighborhood in spite of its challenges, and for meeting its hurdles head on and its new amenities with a sense of excitement. Follow P.J. Orvetti on Twitter at @PJOinDC
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